Multi-functional adhesive hydrogel as bio-interface for wireless transient pacemaker.

Biosens Bioelectron

Department of Biomedical Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon, 999077, Hong Kong, China; Hong Kong Center for Cerebra-Cardiovascular Health Engineering, Hong Kong Science Park, New Territories, 999077, Hong Kong, China. Electronic address:

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Traditional temporary cardiac pacemakers (TCPs) are battery-operated and non-absorbable, requiring surgical removal after use, which can lead to complications.
  • Recent advancements have led to wireless and bioresorbable pacemakers, but challenges remain with tissue-device bonding and performance issues.
  • The development of a multifunctional interface hydrogel (MIH) improves electrical performance, mimics heart tissue strength, enhances adhesion, and reduces infection risk, potentially revolutionizing future implantable medical devices.

Article Abstract

Traditional temporary cardiac pacemakers (TCPs), which employ transcutaneous leads and external wired power systems are battery-dependent and generally non-absorbable with rigidity, thereby necessitating surgical retrieval after therapy and resulting in potentially severe complications. Wireless and bioresorbable transient pacemakers have, hence, emerged recently, though hitting a bottleneck of unfavorable tissue-device bonding interface subject to mismatched mechanical modulus, low adhesive strength, inferior electrical performances, and infection risks. Here, to address such crux, we develop a multifunctional interface hydrogel (MIH) with superior electrical performance to facilitate efficient electrical exchange, comparable mechanical strength to natural heart tissue, robust adhesion property to enable stable device-tissue fixation (tensile strength: ∼30 kPa, shear strength of ∼30 kPa, and peel-off strength: ∼85 kPa), and good bactericidal effect to suppress bacterial growth. Through delicate integration of this versatile MIH with a leadless, battery-free, wireless, and transient pacemaker, the entire system exhibits stable and conformal adhesion to the beating heart while enabling precise and constant electrical stimulation to modulate the cardiac rhythm. It is envisioned that this versatile MIH and the proposed integration framework will have immense potential in overcoming key limitations of traditional TCPs, and may inspire the design of novel bioelectronic-tissue interfaces for next-generation implantable medical devices.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2024.116597DOI Listing

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